Salim Hamdan's Sentence Signals the End of Guantanamo

stumble digg reddit del.ico.us news trust mixx.com

Posted August 7, 2008 | 05:27 PM (EST)



Show your support.
Buzz this article up.

In a decision that will shock those watching the conclusion of the first full US war crimes trial since the Nuremberg Trials, the military jury that yesterday convicted Salim Hamdan of providing "material support for terrorism" has sentenced him to serve five and a half years in prison. Given that the judge in his case, Navy Capt. Keith Allred, had earlier ruled that he would be given credit for time served since he was first charged under the Commission system in July 2003, this means that he will be eligible for release in five months' time.

The verdict will do nothing to convince the many critics of the Military Commission trial system that it is valid -- as there remain too many issues with the Commissions' use of hearsay and coerced evidence, of secret testimony, and of attempts to justify elevating "material support for terrorism" to the level of a war crime, despite no precedent for doing so -- but it must surely come as a relief to those who thought that the jury might have been persuaded by prosecutor John Murphy, who argued that Hamdan's "penalty" should be a sentence of at least 30 years, something "so significant that it forecloses any possibility that he reestablishes his ties with terrorists."

Instead, the sentence is close to the length of time proposed by Hamdan's defense lawyer Charles Swift, the former military lawyer who brought down the Commissions' first incarnation as illegal in the Supreme Court in June 2006. Swift argued that Hamdan should receive a sentence of less than four years because "his cooperation with US intelligence services more than outweighed his culpability as a member of [Osama] bin Laden's motor pool."

This is, I believe, an extremely important point, as it was apparent during Hamdan's two-week trial that he had been exploited by those seeking to prosecute him, who had built a case against him through his own words. At issue was the Fifth Amendment protection against self-incrimination, which has been denied to all those deemed "enemy combatants" in the "War on Terror." While this remains unacceptable -- and is intimately connected with the dark heart of the administration's deliberate policy of shredding the Geneva Conventions to facilitate the illegal interrogation of prisoners (whether coercively or not) -- what made it particularly troubling in Hamdan's case was that, whereas other, non-cooperative prisoners had been released from Guantánamo without ever incriminating themselves, Hamdan was being punished for his cooperation.

While legal challenges to the system will be more muted as a result of this verdict, it is unlikely that Hamdan's defenders will be persuaded not to pursue their many, valid complaints about a system which, as Charles Swift explained today, remains nothing more than "a made-up tribunal to try anybody we don't like."

However, what this sentence also achieves, which was previously unconceivable, is to cap the disturbingly open-ended nature of the administration's detention policies, in a way that was only previously managed through a plea bargain -- that of the Australian David Hicks, who, in the first of the Commission trials following their resuscitation in the fall of 2006 in the Military Commissions Act, received a nine-month sentence to add to the five years and three months he had already spent in US custody.

Until now, the administration has maintained that, if it wishes, it has the right to hold "enemy combatants" without charge or trial until the end of hostilities, which, it has also admitted, might last for generations. A sentence has now superseded that open-ended policy. If one of Osama bin Laden's drivers gets a sentence of seven years and one month in total (five and half years plus the 19 months of his imprisonment before he was charged) in a system specifically established by the administration to try and convict "terror suspects," it is surely now inconceivable that those who planned the whole post-9/11 detention policy can maintain that they can still continue to hold him as an "enemy combatant" after his sentence has been served -- or, for that matter, that they can continue to hold any of the 130 or so prisoners in Guantánamo who have not been cleared, and who are not scheduled to face a trial by Military Commission, beyond the end of the year.

With this sentence, it appears that the death knell has just been sounded for the whole malign Guantánamo project.

 
 

Comments
8
Pending Comments
0
Post Comment

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:
- politigal See Profile I'm a Fan of politigal

This to tompoe -I am so sorry that you have bitten into the fear rap this Administration has been singing.
I suggest you remember that "the only thing to fear is fear itself" and look back in history at all the travesties that have been committed by populations whipped up with fear.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:03 PM on 08/08/2008
- politigal See Profile I'm a Fan of politigal

Not soon enough by my estimation - this whole thing has been a travesty- and I am angry and apalled that the Bush Administration put the United States on the World Stage with such a sleazy operation.
I hope that Salim Hamdan can forgive us for the injustices suffered during his detention and the colossal failure of the United States to uphold his rights and allow him due process AND the right to an Attorney. We have no moral authority to talk to anyone about Human Rights when we treat people like that.
This Administration has everything so backward- why can not they understand that with these actions - they add to the terrorists ranks.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:45 PM on 08/08/2008
- WhiteHat See Profile I'm a Fan of WhiteHat

"...it is surely now inconceivable..."

Not at all. Reports of the administration's position say that they want to try to keep Hamdan and everyone else in Guantanamo locked up until "the end of hostilities." If so, the legal maneuvering alone could keep the "enemy combatants" in jail for many, many more years.

The larger issue in this whole stinking mess is its violation of Constitutionally-guaranteed legal principles: presumption of innocence, right of habeus corpus, freedom from self-incrimination and freedom from cruel and unusual punishment.

Regardless of how Hamdan's case plays out, the questions that are vitally important to every individual outside of Guantanamo haven't been addressed. Until Congress and some Administration re-establish the Constitutional guarantee of justice for all, we're ALL screwed. Until then, Kevin Bacon is 7 steps or less from Guantanamo, and so are you.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:33 AM on 08/08/2008
- jmpurser See Profile I'm a Fan of jmpurser

Okay, two questions:
1) What did he actually DO? He drove Osama around. Can we convict every taxi cab driver Osama used for the same thing? Bus drivers? Airline pilots?

2) Does anyone else think it's kind of odd that "justice" decided on a sentence that is basically "time served"? I mean if he'd been sentenced for much less we'd actually have had to pay him for keeping h im in the Gitmo gulag.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:02 AM on 08/08/2008
- Hatchibakku99 See Profile I'm a Fan of Hatchibakku99

According to the news report I heard tonight, Hamdan may still be held after his sentence has been served. He could still be declared an "unlawful enemy combatant", and could be held indefinitely as long as he is still considered a "threat".
Tell you what, folks. If I were in his position, and I continued to be imprisoned after serving my sentence, it would TURN ME INTO A THREAT real fast!!! With practices like this, Bush's merry band of Constitution assassins are CREATING "monsters" with which to scare us. It's time to wake up, turn on the light and tell Bush that we're not buying into his nightmares any more.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:08 AM on 08/08/2008
- larry278 See Profile I'm a Fan of larry278

Till the man is released from Gitmo-he's still a prisoner. Where will he go after 5 1/2 months passes? Will the USA release him to a nation which will again jail him? Will he be freed in the USA? Having him rot at Gitmo or a jail in another country can't be called justice. The USA has taken years from this man on false pretenses. He could sue W & Co for false imprisonment. The US taxpayer would pay the man's compensation after a court found that he was a victim of false imprisonment.
How many captives have been or are being held at Gitmo?
OK, trolls, have at it & me. Your paymasters will pay you liberally for your reactionary rants.
Try to remember that, in the USA, a person is presumed to be innocent till proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:56 PM on 08/07/2008
- tompoe See Profile I'm a Fan of tompoe

larry278: You obviously are asking questions that one should not ask. The FBI investigated as only it can investigate, and quickly realized that the anthrax murders were not committed by a terrorist. Otherwise, they would have whisked off both "persons of interest" to Guantanamo. After all, we're in a war on terrorism, right? And, Guantanamo is where we hold such characters.

Now, stop asking questions about folks in Guantanamo. The government is doing what it needs to do to protect us.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:15 PM on 08/07/2008
- larry278 See Profile I'm a Fan of larry278

The FBI has an interesting reputation. I read your suggestion, tompoe. What don't you get about a person being presumed to be innocent till proven guitly? Do you have evidence about the anthrax matter or against the prisoners at Gitmo? Your opinions are simply opinions. Opinions are like armpits; we all have them & they all stink.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:05 AM on 08/08/2008

You must be logged in to reply to this comment. Log in

 
 

 
 
Related Tags
 

 Site  Web ask.com